Daddy's Girl cover art

Daddy's Girl

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Daddy's Girl

By: Margie Orford
Narrated by: Jacqueline King
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About this listen

A deserted street below Table Mountain. A six-year-old ballerina waits alone for her mother. Then an unmarked car approaches, and she is gone. With no trace of why she’s been abducted, suspicion falls on her divorced father, Captain Riedwaan. Powerless, he watches helplessly as the search for his daughter is called off.

In desperation, Riedwaan turns to investigative journalist Dr Clare Hart, whose TV documentary about Cape Town’s missing young girls has made her something of a local celebrity. Clare has seen how aspiring gangsters in the Cape Flats ghetto prove their worth by tormenting children. And she knows that the odds of a victim’s survival worsen with each passing minute.

©2013 Margie Orford (P)2013 Oakhill Publishing
Crime Thrillers Suspense Thriller & Suspense Thriller Crime Fiction Mystery

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Critic reviews

"Wonderfully crafted and fully engrossing" (Michael Connelly)
All stars
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The narrator has a lovely voice but let this book down badly. The South African languages have so many nuances that this narrator just couldn't do which spoilt the book for me. Audible, please stick to Saul Reichlin for South African authors.

Dreadful narration

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Well read and performed. If you’re from South Africa I’m sure you might pick apart the actors pronunciation now and again but if like me you’re not you’ll appreciate her wonderful voice, she plays each character to the full.
Really concise writing, Entertaining and tough. Great story!

Entertaining and informative

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Where does Daddy's Girl rank among all the audiobooks you’ve listened to so far?

Its good, but not great. I would have liked more depth to the characters. They were penned in a fairly superficial way.

What was one of the most memorable moments of Daddy's Girl?

The final chapters.

Which scene did you most enjoy?

I don't want to include spoilers, so I can't say!

Was this a book you wanted to listen to all in one sitting?

No, several chapters at a time were enough.

Any additional comments?

Daddy's Girl is very well written. South Africa is a pretty unique culture. The author used to be an investigative journalist with an interest in crime. She has stated that the organisational corruption in her novels represent reality there. The only thing the book lacked for me was a little more depth to the characters (al la Robert Galbraith's The Cuckoo's Calling).Also, although the narrator did a sterling job, I think this audiobook may have benefitted from a Male narrator. Due to the nature of the South African accent (for me), the male characters, read by the female voice, could be a little high pitched. I was at least 2/3rds of the way through the book before that no longer grated on me! An excellent narrator for other books though.

Very good!

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The beauty of a Margie Orford story lies in the authenticity of the people. This story is set in Cape Town. To get someone who has no idea how to pronounce words unique to Cape Town just messed up the whole thing. Voeltjie Arend is not from Saudi Arabia. Why would you pronounce Arend as Agrend? The Malmesbury brei is crucial to the story - yet in this version it sounded more like someone who just likes to emphasize rrrrr. Rather don't do accents or intonations if you do not know what the correct sound is. However, the story has Afrikaans words in it - it is not a surprise that happens along the way - get someone who can pronounce it correctly!

Totally missing the plot

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